Submitted
2020+
Colpitts, J., W.M.C. Jarvis, A.F. Agrawal and H.D. Rundle. 2022. Quantifying male harm and its divergence. Evolution 76: 829-836. doi
Angell, C.S., R. Janacek and H.D. Rundle. 2022. Maternal and paternal age effects on male antler flies: a field experiment. American Naturalist 199(3): 436-442. doi
Rowe, L and H.D. Rundle. 2021. The alignment of natural and sexual selection. Annual Review of Ecology, Evolution, and Systematics 52: 499-517. doi
Videlier, M., H.D. Rundle and V. Careau. 2021. Sex-specific genetic (co)variances of standard metabolic rate, body mass and locomotor activity in Drosophila melanogaster. Journal of Evolutionary Biology 34: 1279–1289. doi / pdf
Yun, L., A.F. Agrawal* and H.D. Rundle*. 2021. On male harm: how it is measured and how it evolves in different environments. American Naturalist 198: 219-23 1. doi / pdf
*These authors contributed equally to this work.
Tremblay, M., H D. Rundle, M. Videlier and V. Careau. 2021. Territoriality in Drosophila: indirect effects and covariance with body mass and metabolic rate. Behavioral Ecology 32: 679-685. doi / pdf
Videlier, M., V. Careau, A.J. Wilson and H.D. Rundle. 2021. Quantifying selection on standard metabolic rate and body mass in Drosophila melanogaster. Evolution 75: 130-140. doi / pdf
Angell, C.S., M. J. Oudin, N.O. Rode, B. S. Mautz, R. Bonduriansky and H.D. Rundle. 2020. Development time mediates the effect of larval diet on ageing and mating success of male antler flies in the wild. Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B 287: 20201876. doi / pdf
Angell, C.S., S. Curtis, A. Ryckenbusch and H.D. Rundle. 2020. Epicuticular compounds of the antler fly, Protopiophila litigata (Diptera: piophilidae): identification and sexual selection across two years in the wild. Annals of the Entomological Society of America 113: 40-49. doi / pdf
Colpitts, J., W.M.C. Jarvis, A.F. Agrawal and H.D. Rundle. 2022. Quantifying male harm and its divergence. Evolution 76: 829-836. doi
Angell, C.S., R. Janacek and H.D. Rundle. 2022. Maternal and paternal age effects on male antler flies: a field experiment. American Naturalist 199(3): 436-442. doi
Rowe, L and H.D. Rundle. 2021. The alignment of natural and sexual selection. Annual Review of Ecology, Evolution, and Systematics 52: 499-517. doi
Videlier, M., H.D. Rundle and V. Careau. 2021. Sex-specific genetic (co)variances of standard metabolic rate, body mass and locomotor activity in Drosophila melanogaster. Journal of Evolutionary Biology 34: 1279–1289. doi / pdf
Yun, L., A.F. Agrawal* and H.D. Rundle*. 2021. On male harm: how it is measured and how it evolves in different environments. American Naturalist 198: 219-23 1. doi / pdf
*These authors contributed equally to this work.
Tremblay, M., H D. Rundle, M. Videlier and V. Careau. 2021. Territoriality in Drosophila: indirect effects and covariance with body mass and metabolic rate. Behavioral Ecology 32: 679-685. doi / pdf
Videlier, M., V. Careau, A.J. Wilson and H.D. Rundle. 2021. Quantifying selection on standard metabolic rate and body mass in Drosophila melanogaster. Evolution 75: 130-140. doi / pdf
Angell, C.S., M. J. Oudin, N.O. Rode, B. S. Mautz, R. Bonduriansky and H.D. Rundle. 2020. Development time mediates the effect of larval diet on ageing and mating success of male antler flies in the wild. Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B 287: 20201876. doi / pdf
Angell, C.S., S. Curtis, A. Ryckenbusch and H.D. Rundle. 2020. Epicuticular compounds of the antler fly, Protopiophila litigata (Diptera: piophilidae): identification and sexual selection across two years in the wild. Annals of the Entomological Society of America 113: 40-49. doi / pdf
2010-2019
Mautz*, B.S., N.O. Rode*, R. Bonduriansky and H.D. Rundle. 2019. Comparing ageing and the effects of diet supplementation in wild vs. captive antler flies, Protopiophila litigata. Journal of Animal Ecology 88: 1913-1924. doi / pdf
*These authors contributed equally to this work.
Yun, L., M. Bayoumi, S. Yang, P.J. Chen, H.D. Rundle* and Aneil F. Agrawal*. 2019. Testing for local adaptation in adult male and female fitness among populations evolved under different mate competition regimes. Evolution 73(8): 1604–1616. doi / pdf
*These authors contributed equally to this work.
Videlier, M., H.D. Rundle and V. Careau. 2019. Sex-specific among-individual covariation in locomotor activity and resting metabolic rate in Drosophila melanogaster. American Naturalist 194: E164-E176. doi / pdf
Pardy, J.A., H.D. Rundle, M.A. Bernards and A.J. Moehring. 2019. The genetic basis of female pheromone differences between Drosophila melanogaster and D. simulans. Heredity 122: 93–109. doi / pdf
Rundle, H.D. and L. Rowe. 2018. The contribution of sexual selection to ecological and mutation-order speciation. Evolution 72(11): 2571–2575. doi / pdf
MacPherson, A., L. Yun, T.S. Barrera, A.F. Agrawal and H.D. Rundle. 2018. The effects of male harm vary with female quality and environmental complexity in Drosophila melanogaster. Biology Letters 14: 20180443. doi / pdf
Yun, L., P.J. Chen, K.E. Kwok, C.S. Angell, H.D. Rundle* and A.F. Agrawal*. 2018. Competition for mates and the improvement of nonsexual fitness. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (USA) 115 (26): 6762-6767. doi / pdf
*These authors contributed equally to this work.
Arbuthnott, D., B.S. Mautz and H.D. Rundle. 2018. Rugged fitness landscapes and by-product adaptation in experimental populations of Drosophila melanogaster. Evolutionary Ecology Research 19: 15-28. pdf
Colpitts, J., D. Williscroft, H.S. Sekhon and H.D. Rundle. 2017. The purging of deleterious mutations in simple and complex mating environments. Biology Letters 13: 20170518. doi / pdf
Booksmythe, I. H.D. Rundle and G. Arnqvist. 2017. Sexual dimorphism in epicuticular compounds despite similar sexual selection in sex role reversed seed beetles. Journal of Evolutionary Biology 30: 2005-2016. doi / pdf
Singh, A., A.F. Agrawal* and H.D. Rundle*. 2017. Environmental complexity and the purging of deleterious alleles. Evolution 71: 2714-2720. doi / pdf
*These authors contributed equally to this work.
Fedina T.Y., D. Arbuthnott, H.D. Rundle, D.E.L. Promislow and S.D. Pletcher. 2017. Tissue-specific insulin signaling mediates female sexual attractiveness. PLoS Genetics 13(8): e1006935. doi / pdf
Yun, L., P.J. Chen, A. Singh, A.F. Agrawal* and H.D. Rundle*. 2017. The physical environment mediates male harm and its effect on selection in females. Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B 284: 20170424. doi / pdf
*These authors contributed equally to this work.
Rode, N.O., P. Soroye, R. Kassen and H.D. Rundle. 2017. Air-borne genotype by genotype indirect genetic effects are substantial in the filamentous fungus Aspergillus nidulans. Heredity 119: 1-7. doi / pdf
Gershman, S.N. and H.D. Rundle. 2017. Crowd control: Sex ratio affects sexually selected CHCs in male Drosophila serrata. Journal of Evolutionary Biology 30: 583-590. doi / pdf
Humphreys, D.P, H.D. Rundle and K.A. Dyer. 2016. Patterns of reproductive isolation in the Drosophila subquinaria complex: Can reinforced premating isolation cascade to other species? Current Zoology 62: 183-191. doi / pdf
Gershman, S.N. and H.D. Rundle. 2016. Level up: the expression of male sexually selected cuticular hydrocarbons is mediated by sexual experience. Animal Behaviour 112: 169-177. doi / pdf
Rundle, H.D. and K.A. Dyer. 2015. Reproductive character displacement of female mate preferences for male cuticular hydrocarbons in Drosophila subquinaria. Evolution 69: 2625-2637. doi / pdf
Chenoweth, S.F., N.C. Appleton, S.L. Allen and H.D. Rundle. 2015. Genomic evidence that sexual selection impedes adaptation to a novel environment. Current Biology 25: 1860-1866. doi / pdf
Oudin, M.J., R. Bonduriansky and H.D. Rundle. 2015. Experimental evidence of condition-dependent sexual dimorphism in the weakly dimorphic antler fly, Protopiophila litigata (Diptera: Piophilidae). Biological Journal of the Linnean Society 116: 211-220. doi / pdf
Wright, D.S., M. Pierotti, H.D. Rundle and J.S. McKinnon. 2015. Conspicuous female ornamentation and male mate preference of threespine sticklebacks (Gasterosteus aculeatus). PLoS One 10(3): e0120723. doi / pdf
Bonduriansky, R., M.A. Mallet, D. Arbuthnott, V. Pawlowsky-Glahn, J.J. Egocuze and H.D. Rundle. 2015. Differential effects of genetic vs. environmental quality in Drosophila melanogaster suggest multiple forms of condition dependence. Ecology Letters 18: 317-326. doi / pdf
Stinziano, J.R., R.J. Sové, H.D. Rundle and B.J. Sinclair. 2015. Rapid desiccation hardening changes the cuticular hydrocarbon profile of Drosophila melanogaster. Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology Part A: Molecular & Integrative Physiology 180: 38-42. doi / pdf
White, A.J. and H.D. Rundle. 2014. Territory defense as a condition-dependent component of male sexual fitness in Drosophila serrata. Evolution 69: 407-418. doi / pdf
Gershman, S., E. Toumishey and H.D. Rundle. 2014. Time flies: Time of day and social environment affect cuticular hydrocarbon attractiveness in Drosophila serrata. Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B 281: 20140821. doi / pdf
Gosden, T.P., H.D. Rundle and S.F. Chenoweth. 2014. Testing the correlated response hypothesis for the evolution and maintenance of male mating preferences in Drosophila serrata. Journal of Evolutionary Biology 27: 2106-2112. doi / pdf
Ingelby, F.C. P. Innocenti, H.D. Rundle and E.H. Morrow. 2014. Between-sex genetic covariance constrains the evolution of sexual dimorphism in Drosophila melanogaster. Journal of Evolutionary Biology 27: 1721-1732. doi / pdf
Gershman, S., M. Delcourt and H.D. Rundle. 2014. Sexual selection on Drosophila serrata male pheromones does not vary with female age or mating status. Journal of Evolutionary Biology 27: 1279-1286. doi / pdf
Arbuthnott, D, A.F. Agrawal and H.D. Rundle. 2014. Remating and sperm competition in replicate populations of Drosophila melanogaster adapted to alternative environments. PLoS ONE 9(2): e90207. doi / pdf
Dyer, K.A., B.E. White, J.L. Sztepanacz, E.R. Bewick and H.D. Rundle. 2014. Reproductive character displacement of epicuticular compounds and their contribution to mate choice in Drosophila subquinaria and Drosophila recens. Evolution 68: 1163-1175. doi / pdf
Arbuthnott, D. and H.D. Rundle. 2014. Misalignment of natural and sexual selection among divergently adapted Drosophila melanogaster populations. Animal Behaviour 87: 45-51. doi / pdf
Punzalan, D., M. Delcourt and H.D. Rundle. 2014. Comparing the intersex genetic correlation for fitness across novel environments in the fruit fly, Drosophila serrata. Heredity 112: 143-148. doi / pdf
Arbuthnott, D., E.M. Dutton, A. F. Agrawal and H.D. Rundle. 2014. The ecology of sexual conflict: Parallel evolution of male harm and female defense in experimental Drosophila melanogaster populations. Ecology Letters 17: 221-228. doi / pdf
Wong, A. and H.D. Rundle. 2013. Selection on the Drosophila seminal fluid protein Acp62F. Ecology and Evolution 3: 1942-1950. doi / pdf
Curtis, S., J.L. Sztepanacz, B.E. White, K.A. Dyer, H.D. Rundle and P. Mayer. 2013. Epicuticular compounds of Drosophila subquinaria and D. recens: Identification, quantification, and their role in female mate choice. Journal of Chemical Ecology: 39: 579–590. doi / pdf
Schoustra, S.E., D. Punzalan, R. Dali, H.D. Rundle and R. Kassen. 2012. Multivariate phenotypic divergence due to the fixation of beneficial mutations in experimentally evolved lineages of a filamentous fungus. PLoS ONE 7(11): e50305. doi / pdf
Sztepanacz, J.L. and H.D. Rundle. 2012. Reduced genetic variance among high fitness individuals: inferring stabilizing selection on male sexual displays in Drosophila serrata. Evolution 66: 3101-3110. doi / pdf
Arbuthnott, D. and H.D. Rundle. 2012. Sexual selection is ineffectual or inhibits the purging of deleterious mutations in Drosophila melanogaster. Evolution 66: 2127-2137. doi / pdf
Delcourt, M., M.W. Blows, J.D. Aguirre and H.D. Rundle. 2012. Evolutionary optimum for male sexual traits characterized using the multivariate Robertson–Price Identity. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (USA) 109: 10414-10419. doi / pdf
MacLellan, K., L. Kwan, M.C. Whitlock and H.D. Rundle. 2012. Dietary stress does not strengthen selection against single deleterious mutations in Drosophila melanogaster. Heredity 108: 203-201. doi / pdf
Chenoweth, S.F., J. Hunt and H.D. Rundle. 2012. Analysing and comparing the geometry of individual fitness surfaces. In: The Adaptive Landscape in Evolutionary Biology (eds. E.I. Svensson & R. Calsbeek) Oxford University Press, Oxford. pdf
Bedhomme, S., A.K. Chippindale, N.G. Prasad, M. Delcourt, J.K. Abbott, M.A. Mallet and H.D. Rundle. 2011. Male-limited evolution suggests no extant intralocus sexual conflict over the sexually dimorphic cuticular hydrocarbons of Drosophila melanogaster. Journal of Genetics 90: 1-10. doi / pdf
Bertram, S., L.P. Fitzsimmons, E.M. Whattam, H.D. Rundle and R Gorelick. 2011. Phenotypic covariance structure and its divergence for acoustic mate attraction signals among four cricket species. Ecology and Evolution 2: 181-195. doi / pdf
Charette, M., C.-A. Darveau, S.F. Perry and H.D. Rundle. 2011. Evolutionary consequences of altered atmospheric oxygen in Drosophila melanogaster. PLoS ONE 10(6):e26876. doi / pdf
Delcourt, M. and H.D. Rundle. 2011. Condition dependence of a multicomponent sexual display trait in Drosophila serrata. American Naturalist: 177: 812-823. doi / pdf
Rundle, H.D. and S.F. Chenoweth. 2011. Stronger convex (stabilizing) selection on homologous sexual display traits in females than in males: a multi-population comparison in Drosophila serrata. Evolution 65: 893–899. doi / pdf
Delcourt, M., M.W. Blows and H.D. Rundle. 2010. Quantitative genetics of female mate preferences in an ancestral and a novel environment. Evolution 64: 2758-2766. doi / pdf
Chenoweth, S.F., H.D. Rundle and M.W. Blows. 2010. Experimental evidence for the evolution of indirect genetic effects: changes in the interaction effect coefficient, psi (ψ), due to sexual selection. Evolution 64: 1849-1856. doi / pdf
Schoustra, S.*, H.D. Rundle*, R. Dali and R. Kassen. 2010. Fitness-associated sexual reproduction in a filamentous fungus. Current Biology 20: 1350-1355. doi / pdf
*These authors contributed equally to this work.
Chenoweth, S.F., H.D. Rundle and M.W. Blows. 2010. The contribution of selection and genetic constraints to phenotypic divergence. American Naturalist 175: 186-196. doi / pdf
Rundle, H.D. and J.W. Boughman. 2010. Behavioral ecology and speciation. In: Evolutionary Behavioral Ecology (eds. D.F. Westneat & C.W. Fox) Oxford University Press, Oxford. pp. 471-487. pdf
Mautz*, B.S., N.O. Rode*, R. Bonduriansky and H.D. Rundle. 2019. Comparing ageing and the effects of diet supplementation in wild vs. captive antler flies, Protopiophila litigata. Journal of Animal Ecology 88: 1913-1924. doi / pdf
*These authors contributed equally to this work.
Yun, L., M. Bayoumi, S. Yang, P.J. Chen, H.D. Rundle* and Aneil F. Agrawal*. 2019. Testing for local adaptation in adult male and female fitness among populations evolved under different mate competition regimes. Evolution 73(8): 1604–1616. doi / pdf
*These authors contributed equally to this work.
Videlier, M., H.D. Rundle and V. Careau. 2019. Sex-specific among-individual covariation in locomotor activity and resting metabolic rate in Drosophila melanogaster. American Naturalist 194: E164-E176. doi / pdf
Pardy, J.A., H.D. Rundle, M.A. Bernards and A.J. Moehring. 2019. The genetic basis of female pheromone differences between Drosophila melanogaster and D. simulans. Heredity 122: 93–109. doi / pdf
Rundle, H.D. and L. Rowe. 2018. The contribution of sexual selection to ecological and mutation-order speciation. Evolution 72(11): 2571–2575. doi / pdf
MacPherson, A., L. Yun, T.S. Barrera, A.F. Agrawal and H.D. Rundle. 2018. The effects of male harm vary with female quality and environmental complexity in Drosophila melanogaster. Biology Letters 14: 20180443. doi / pdf
Yun, L., P.J. Chen, K.E. Kwok, C.S. Angell, H.D. Rundle* and A.F. Agrawal*. 2018. Competition for mates and the improvement of nonsexual fitness. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (USA) 115 (26): 6762-6767. doi / pdf
*These authors contributed equally to this work.
Arbuthnott, D., B.S. Mautz and H.D. Rundle. 2018. Rugged fitness landscapes and by-product adaptation in experimental populations of Drosophila melanogaster. Evolutionary Ecology Research 19: 15-28. pdf
Colpitts, J., D. Williscroft, H.S. Sekhon and H.D. Rundle. 2017. The purging of deleterious mutations in simple and complex mating environments. Biology Letters 13: 20170518. doi / pdf
Booksmythe, I. H.D. Rundle and G. Arnqvist. 2017. Sexual dimorphism in epicuticular compounds despite similar sexual selection in sex role reversed seed beetles. Journal of Evolutionary Biology 30: 2005-2016. doi / pdf
Singh, A., A.F. Agrawal* and H.D. Rundle*. 2017. Environmental complexity and the purging of deleterious alleles. Evolution 71: 2714-2720. doi / pdf
*These authors contributed equally to this work.
Fedina T.Y., D. Arbuthnott, H.D. Rundle, D.E.L. Promislow and S.D. Pletcher. 2017. Tissue-specific insulin signaling mediates female sexual attractiveness. PLoS Genetics 13(8): e1006935. doi / pdf
Yun, L., P.J. Chen, A. Singh, A.F. Agrawal* and H.D. Rundle*. 2017. The physical environment mediates male harm and its effect on selection in females. Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B 284: 20170424. doi / pdf
*These authors contributed equally to this work.
Rode, N.O., P. Soroye, R. Kassen and H.D. Rundle. 2017. Air-borne genotype by genotype indirect genetic effects are substantial in the filamentous fungus Aspergillus nidulans. Heredity 119: 1-7. doi / pdf
Gershman, S.N. and H.D. Rundle. 2017. Crowd control: Sex ratio affects sexually selected CHCs in male Drosophila serrata. Journal of Evolutionary Biology 30: 583-590. doi / pdf
Humphreys, D.P, H.D. Rundle and K.A. Dyer. 2016. Patterns of reproductive isolation in the Drosophila subquinaria complex: Can reinforced premating isolation cascade to other species? Current Zoology 62: 183-191. doi / pdf
Gershman, S.N. and H.D. Rundle. 2016. Level up: the expression of male sexually selected cuticular hydrocarbons is mediated by sexual experience. Animal Behaviour 112: 169-177. doi / pdf
Rundle, H.D. and K.A. Dyer. 2015. Reproductive character displacement of female mate preferences for male cuticular hydrocarbons in Drosophila subquinaria. Evolution 69: 2625-2637. doi / pdf
Chenoweth, S.F., N.C. Appleton, S.L. Allen and H.D. Rundle. 2015. Genomic evidence that sexual selection impedes adaptation to a novel environment. Current Biology 25: 1860-1866. doi / pdf
Oudin, M.J., R. Bonduriansky and H.D. Rundle. 2015. Experimental evidence of condition-dependent sexual dimorphism in the weakly dimorphic antler fly, Protopiophila litigata (Diptera: Piophilidae). Biological Journal of the Linnean Society 116: 211-220. doi / pdf
Wright, D.S., M. Pierotti, H.D. Rundle and J.S. McKinnon. 2015. Conspicuous female ornamentation and male mate preference of threespine sticklebacks (Gasterosteus aculeatus). PLoS One 10(3): e0120723. doi / pdf
Bonduriansky, R., M.A. Mallet, D. Arbuthnott, V. Pawlowsky-Glahn, J.J. Egocuze and H.D. Rundle. 2015. Differential effects of genetic vs. environmental quality in Drosophila melanogaster suggest multiple forms of condition dependence. Ecology Letters 18: 317-326. doi / pdf
Stinziano, J.R., R.J. Sové, H.D. Rundle and B.J. Sinclair. 2015. Rapid desiccation hardening changes the cuticular hydrocarbon profile of Drosophila melanogaster. Comparative Biochemistry and Physiology Part A: Molecular & Integrative Physiology 180: 38-42. doi / pdf
White, A.J. and H.D. Rundle. 2014. Territory defense as a condition-dependent component of male sexual fitness in Drosophila serrata. Evolution 69: 407-418. doi / pdf
Gershman, S., E. Toumishey and H.D. Rundle. 2014. Time flies: Time of day and social environment affect cuticular hydrocarbon attractiveness in Drosophila serrata. Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B 281: 20140821. doi / pdf
Gosden, T.P., H.D. Rundle and S.F. Chenoweth. 2014. Testing the correlated response hypothesis for the evolution and maintenance of male mating preferences in Drosophila serrata. Journal of Evolutionary Biology 27: 2106-2112. doi / pdf
Ingelby, F.C. P. Innocenti, H.D. Rundle and E.H. Morrow. 2014. Between-sex genetic covariance constrains the evolution of sexual dimorphism in Drosophila melanogaster. Journal of Evolutionary Biology 27: 1721-1732. doi / pdf
Gershman, S., M. Delcourt and H.D. Rundle. 2014. Sexual selection on Drosophila serrata male pheromones does not vary with female age or mating status. Journal of Evolutionary Biology 27: 1279-1286. doi / pdf
Arbuthnott, D, A.F. Agrawal and H.D. Rundle. 2014. Remating and sperm competition in replicate populations of Drosophila melanogaster adapted to alternative environments. PLoS ONE 9(2): e90207. doi / pdf
Dyer, K.A., B.E. White, J.L. Sztepanacz, E.R. Bewick and H.D. Rundle. 2014. Reproductive character displacement of epicuticular compounds and their contribution to mate choice in Drosophila subquinaria and Drosophila recens. Evolution 68: 1163-1175. doi / pdf
Arbuthnott, D. and H.D. Rundle. 2014. Misalignment of natural and sexual selection among divergently adapted Drosophila melanogaster populations. Animal Behaviour 87: 45-51. doi / pdf
Punzalan, D., M. Delcourt and H.D. Rundle. 2014. Comparing the intersex genetic correlation for fitness across novel environments in the fruit fly, Drosophila serrata. Heredity 112: 143-148. doi / pdf
Arbuthnott, D., E.M. Dutton, A. F. Agrawal and H.D. Rundle. 2014. The ecology of sexual conflict: Parallel evolution of male harm and female defense in experimental Drosophila melanogaster populations. Ecology Letters 17: 221-228. doi / pdf
Wong, A. and H.D. Rundle. 2013. Selection on the Drosophila seminal fluid protein Acp62F. Ecology and Evolution 3: 1942-1950. doi / pdf
Curtis, S., J.L. Sztepanacz, B.E. White, K.A. Dyer, H.D. Rundle and P. Mayer. 2013. Epicuticular compounds of Drosophila subquinaria and D. recens: Identification, quantification, and their role in female mate choice. Journal of Chemical Ecology: 39: 579–590. doi / pdf
Schoustra, S.E., D. Punzalan, R. Dali, H.D. Rundle and R. Kassen. 2012. Multivariate phenotypic divergence due to the fixation of beneficial mutations in experimentally evolved lineages of a filamentous fungus. PLoS ONE 7(11): e50305. doi / pdf
Sztepanacz, J.L. and H.D. Rundle. 2012. Reduced genetic variance among high fitness individuals: inferring stabilizing selection on male sexual displays in Drosophila serrata. Evolution 66: 3101-3110. doi / pdf
Arbuthnott, D. and H.D. Rundle. 2012. Sexual selection is ineffectual or inhibits the purging of deleterious mutations in Drosophila melanogaster. Evolution 66: 2127-2137. doi / pdf
Delcourt, M., M.W. Blows, J.D. Aguirre and H.D. Rundle. 2012. Evolutionary optimum for male sexual traits characterized using the multivariate Robertson–Price Identity. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (USA) 109: 10414-10419. doi / pdf
MacLellan, K., L. Kwan, M.C. Whitlock and H.D. Rundle. 2012. Dietary stress does not strengthen selection against single deleterious mutations in Drosophila melanogaster. Heredity 108: 203-201. doi / pdf
Chenoweth, S.F., J. Hunt and H.D. Rundle. 2012. Analysing and comparing the geometry of individual fitness surfaces. In: The Adaptive Landscape in Evolutionary Biology (eds. E.I. Svensson & R. Calsbeek) Oxford University Press, Oxford. pdf
Bedhomme, S., A.K. Chippindale, N.G. Prasad, M. Delcourt, J.K. Abbott, M.A. Mallet and H.D. Rundle. 2011. Male-limited evolution suggests no extant intralocus sexual conflict over the sexually dimorphic cuticular hydrocarbons of Drosophila melanogaster. Journal of Genetics 90: 1-10. doi / pdf
Bertram, S., L.P. Fitzsimmons, E.M. Whattam, H.D. Rundle and R Gorelick. 2011. Phenotypic covariance structure and its divergence for acoustic mate attraction signals among four cricket species. Ecology and Evolution 2: 181-195. doi / pdf
Charette, M., C.-A. Darveau, S.F. Perry and H.D. Rundle. 2011. Evolutionary consequences of altered atmospheric oxygen in Drosophila melanogaster. PLoS ONE 10(6):e26876. doi / pdf
Delcourt, M. and H.D. Rundle. 2011. Condition dependence of a multicomponent sexual display trait in Drosophila serrata. American Naturalist: 177: 812-823. doi / pdf
Rundle, H.D. and S.F. Chenoweth. 2011. Stronger convex (stabilizing) selection on homologous sexual display traits in females than in males: a multi-population comparison in Drosophila serrata. Evolution 65: 893–899. doi / pdf
Delcourt, M., M.W. Blows and H.D. Rundle. 2010. Quantitative genetics of female mate preferences in an ancestral and a novel environment. Evolution 64: 2758-2766. doi / pdf
Chenoweth, S.F., H.D. Rundle and M.W. Blows. 2010. Experimental evidence for the evolution of indirect genetic effects: changes in the interaction effect coefficient, psi (ψ), due to sexual selection. Evolution 64: 1849-1856. doi / pdf
Schoustra, S.*, H.D. Rundle*, R. Dali and R. Kassen. 2010. Fitness-associated sexual reproduction in a filamentous fungus. Current Biology 20: 1350-1355. doi / pdf
*These authors contributed equally to this work.
Chenoweth, S.F., H.D. Rundle and M.W. Blows. 2010. The contribution of selection and genetic constraints to phenotypic divergence. American Naturalist 175: 186-196. doi / pdf
Rundle, H.D. and J.W. Boughman. 2010. Behavioral ecology and speciation. In: Evolutionary Behavioral Ecology (eds. D.F. Westneat & C.W. Fox) Oxford University Press, Oxford. pp. 471-487. pdf
2000-2009
Kwan, L. and H.D. Rundle. 2009. Adaptation to desiccation fails to generate pre- and postmating isolation in replicate Drosophila melanogaster laboratory populations. Evolution 64: 710-723. doi / pdf
MacLellan, K., M.C. Whitlock and H.D. Rundle. 2009. Sexual selection against deleterious mutations via variable male search success. Biology Letters 5: 795-797. doi. See correction: doi / pdf
Rundle, H.D., S.F. Chenoweth and M.W. Blows. 2009. The diversification of mate preferences by natural and sexual selection. Journal of Evolutionary Biology 22: 1608-1615. doi / pdf
Hine, E., S.F. Chenoweth, H.D. Rundle and M.W. Blows. 2009. Characterizing the evolution of the genetic variance using genetic covariance tensors. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: 364: 1567-1578. doi / pdf
Auld, H.L., D. Punzalan, J-G.J. Godin and H.D. Rundle. 2009. Do female fruit flies (Drosophila serrata) copy the mate choice of others? Behavioural Processes 82: 78-80. doi / pdf
Delcourt, M., M.W. Blows and H.D. Rundle. 2009. Sexually antagonistic genetic variance for fitness in an ancestral and a novel environment. Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B 276: 2009-2014. doi / pdf
Nosil, P. and H.D. Rundle. 2009. Ecological Speciation. In: The Princeton Guide to Ecology (ed.S.A. Levin) Princeton University Press, Princeton, New Jersey.
Rundle, H.D., S.F. Chenoweth and M.W. Blows. 2008. Comparing complex fitness surfaces: Among-population variation in mutual sexual selection in Drosophila serrata. American Naturalist 171: 443-454. doi / pdf
Chenoweth, S.F., H.D. Rundle and M.W. Blows. 2008. Genetic constraints and the evolution of display trait sexual dimorphism by natural and sexual selection. American Naturalist 171: 22-34. doi / pdf
Rundle, H.D., A. Ödeen and A.Ø. Mooers. 2007. An experimental test for indirect benefits in Drosophila melanogaster. BMC Evolutionary Biology 7: 36. doi / pdf
Rundle, H.D., S.F. Chenoweth and M.W. Blows. 2006. The roles of natural and sexual selection during adaptation to a novel environment. Evolution 60: 2218-2225. doi / pdf
Rundle, H.D., S.F. Chenoweth, P. Doughty and M.W. Blows. 2005. Divergent selection and the evolution of signal traits and mating preferences. PLoS Biology 3(11): 1988-1995. doi / pdf
Petfield, D., S.F. Chenoweth, H.D. Rundle and M.W. Blows. 2005. Genetic variance in female condition predicts indirect genetic variance in male sexual display traits. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (USA) 102: 6045-6050. doi / pdf
Drake, A., E. Rashkovetsky, D. Wong, H.D. Rundle and A.Ø. Mooers. 2005. Variable assortative mating in replicate mating trials using Drosophila melanogaster populations derived from contrasting opposing slopes of ‘Evolution Canyon’, Israel. Journal of Evolutionary Biology 18: 1123-1129. doi / pdf
Boughman, J.W., H.D. Rundle and D. Schluter. 2005. Parallel evolution of sexual isolation in sticklebacks. Evolution 59: 361-373. doi / pdf
Rundle, H.D. and P. Nosil. 2005. Ecological speciation. Ecology Letters 8: 336-352. doi / pdf
Rundle, H.D. and D. Schluter. 2004. Natural selection and ecological speciation in sticklebacks. In: Adaptive Speciation (eds. Dieckmann, U., Doebeli, M., Metz, J.A.J. & Tautz, D.) Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, pp. 192-209. pdf
Rundle, H.D., S.M. Vamosi and D. Schluter. 2003. Experimental test of predation's effect on divergent selection during character displacement in sticklebacks. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (USA) 100: 14943-14948. doi / pdf
Rundle, H.D. 2003. Divergent environments and population bottlenecks fail to generate premating isolation in Drosophila pseudoobscura. Evolution 57: 2557-2565. doi / pdf
McKinnon, J.S. and H.D. Rundle. 2002. Speciation in nature: the threespine stickleback model systems. Trends in Ecology and Evolution 17: 480-488. doi / pdf
Rundle, H.D. 2002. A test of ecologically dependent postmating isolation between sympatric sticklebacks. Evolution 56: 322-329. doi / pdf
Rundle, H.D. and M.C. Whitlock. 2001. A genetic interpretation of ecologically dependent isolation. Evolution 55: 198-201. doi / pdf
Rundle, H.D., F. Breden, C. Griswold, A.Ø. Mooers, R.A. Vos and J. Whitton. 2001. Hybridization without guilt: gene flow and the Biological Species Concept. Journal of Evolutionary Biology 14: 868-869. doi / pdf
Schluter, D., J.W. Boughman and H.D. Rundle. 2001. Parallel speciation with allopatry. Trends in Ecology and Evolution 16: 283-284. doi / pdf
Rundle, H.D., L. Nagel, J.W. Boughman and D. Schluter. 2000. Natural selection and parallel speciation in sympatric sticklebacks. Science 287: 306-308. doi / pdf
Kwan, L. and H.D. Rundle. 2009. Adaptation to desiccation fails to generate pre- and postmating isolation in replicate Drosophila melanogaster laboratory populations. Evolution 64: 710-723. doi / pdf
MacLellan, K., M.C. Whitlock and H.D. Rundle. 2009. Sexual selection against deleterious mutations via variable male search success. Biology Letters 5: 795-797. doi. See correction: doi / pdf
Rundle, H.D., S.F. Chenoweth and M.W. Blows. 2009. The diversification of mate preferences by natural and sexual selection. Journal of Evolutionary Biology 22: 1608-1615. doi / pdf
Hine, E., S.F. Chenoweth, H.D. Rundle and M.W. Blows. 2009. Characterizing the evolution of the genetic variance using genetic covariance tensors. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B: 364: 1567-1578. doi / pdf
Auld, H.L., D. Punzalan, J-G.J. Godin and H.D. Rundle. 2009. Do female fruit flies (Drosophila serrata) copy the mate choice of others? Behavioural Processes 82: 78-80. doi / pdf
Delcourt, M., M.W. Blows and H.D. Rundle. 2009. Sexually antagonistic genetic variance for fitness in an ancestral and a novel environment. Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B 276: 2009-2014. doi / pdf
Nosil, P. and H.D. Rundle. 2009. Ecological Speciation. In: The Princeton Guide to Ecology (ed.S.A. Levin) Princeton University Press, Princeton, New Jersey.
Rundle, H.D., S.F. Chenoweth and M.W. Blows. 2008. Comparing complex fitness surfaces: Among-population variation in mutual sexual selection in Drosophila serrata. American Naturalist 171: 443-454. doi / pdf
Chenoweth, S.F., H.D. Rundle and M.W. Blows. 2008. Genetic constraints and the evolution of display trait sexual dimorphism by natural and sexual selection. American Naturalist 171: 22-34. doi / pdf
Rundle, H.D., A. Ödeen and A.Ø. Mooers. 2007. An experimental test for indirect benefits in Drosophila melanogaster. BMC Evolutionary Biology 7: 36. doi / pdf
Rundle, H.D., S.F. Chenoweth and M.W. Blows. 2006. The roles of natural and sexual selection during adaptation to a novel environment. Evolution 60: 2218-2225. doi / pdf
Rundle, H.D., S.F. Chenoweth, P. Doughty and M.W. Blows. 2005. Divergent selection and the evolution of signal traits and mating preferences. PLoS Biology 3(11): 1988-1995. doi / pdf
Petfield, D., S.F. Chenoweth, H.D. Rundle and M.W. Blows. 2005. Genetic variance in female condition predicts indirect genetic variance in male sexual display traits. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (USA) 102: 6045-6050. doi / pdf
Drake, A., E. Rashkovetsky, D. Wong, H.D. Rundle and A.Ø. Mooers. 2005. Variable assortative mating in replicate mating trials using Drosophila melanogaster populations derived from contrasting opposing slopes of ‘Evolution Canyon’, Israel. Journal of Evolutionary Biology 18: 1123-1129. doi / pdf
Boughman, J.W., H.D. Rundle and D. Schluter. 2005. Parallel evolution of sexual isolation in sticklebacks. Evolution 59: 361-373. doi / pdf
Rundle, H.D. and P. Nosil. 2005. Ecological speciation. Ecology Letters 8: 336-352. doi / pdf
Rundle, H.D. and D. Schluter. 2004. Natural selection and ecological speciation in sticklebacks. In: Adaptive Speciation (eds. Dieckmann, U., Doebeli, M., Metz, J.A.J. & Tautz, D.) Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, pp. 192-209. pdf
Rundle, H.D., S.M. Vamosi and D. Schluter. 2003. Experimental test of predation's effect on divergent selection during character displacement in sticklebacks. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (USA) 100: 14943-14948. doi / pdf
Rundle, H.D. 2003. Divergent environments and population bottlenecks fail to generate premating isolation in Drosophila pseudoobscura. Evolution 57: 2557-2565. doi / pdf
McKinnon, J.S. and H.D. Rundle. 2002. Speciation in nature: the threespine stickleback model systems. Trends in Ecology and Evolution 17: 480-488. doi / pdf
Rundle, H.D. 2002. A test of ecologically dependent postmating isolation between sympatric sticklebacks. Evolution 56: 322-329. doi / pdf
Rundle, H.D. and M.C. Whitlock. 2001. A genetic interpretation of ecologically dependent isolation. Evolution 55: 198-201. doi / pdf
Rundle, H.D., F. Breden, C. Griswold, A.Ø. Mooers, R.A. Vos and J. Whitton. 2001. Hybridization without guilt: gene flow and the Biological Species Concept. Journal of Evolutionary Biology 14: 868-869. doi / pdf
Schluter, D., J.W. Boughman and H.D. Rundle. 2001. Parallel speciation with allopatry. Trends in Ecology and Evolution 16: 283-284. doi / pdf
Rundle, H.D., L. Nagel, J.W. Boughman and D. Schluter. 2000. Natural selection and parallel speciation in sympatric sticklebacks. Science 287: 306-308. doi / pdf
Last Century
Mooers, A.Ø., H.D. Rundle and M.C. Whitlock. 1999. The effects of selection and bottlenecks on male mating success in peripheral isolates. American Naturalist 153: 437-444. doi / pdf
Rundle, H.D., A.Ø. Mooers and M.C. Whitlock. 1999. Experimental tests of founder-flush: a reply to Templeton. Evolution 53: 1632-1633. doi / pdf
Rundle, H.D., A.Ø. Mooers and M.C. Whitlock. 1998. Single founder-flush events and the evolution of reproductive isolation. Evolution 52: 1850-1855. doi / pdf
Rundle, H.D. and D. Schluter. 1998. Reinforcement of stickleback mate preferences: sympatry breeds contempt. Evolution 52: 200-208. doi / pdf
Rundle, H.D. and S. Vamosi. 1996. Selection may be strongest when resources are scarce: a comment on Wilson. Evolutionary Ecology 10: 559-563. doi / pdf
Rundle, H.D. and D.A. Jackson. 1996. Spatial and temporal variation in littoral-zone fish communities: a new statistical approach. Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Science 53: 2167-2176. doi / pdf
Gagnon, R., H. Rundle, L. Johnston and V.K.M. Han. 1995. Alterations in fetal and placental deoxyribonucleic acid synthesis rates after chronic fetal placental embolization. American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology 172: 1451-1458. doi / pdf
Bocking, A.D., S.E. White, S. Kent, L. Fraher, V.K.M. Han, H. Rundle and S.B. Hooper. 1995. Effect of prolonged catecholamine infusion on heart rate, blood pressure, breathing and growth in fetal sheep. Canadian Journal of Physiology and Pharmacology 73: 1750-1758. doi / pdf
Mooers, A.Ø., H.D. Rundle and M.C. Whitlock. 1999. The effects of selection and bottlenecks on male mating success in peripheral isolates. American Naturalist 153: 437-444. doi / pdf
Rundle, H.D., A.Ø. Mooers and M.C. Whitlock. 1999. Experimental tests of founder-flush: a reply to Templeton. Evolution 53: 1632-1633. doi / pdf
Rundle, H.D., A.Ø. Mooers and M.C. Whitlock. 1998. Single founder-flush events and the evolution of reproductive isolation. Evolution 52: 1850-1855. doi / pdf
Rundle, H.D. and D. Schluter. 1998. Reinforcement of stickleback mate preferences: sympatry breeds contempt. Evolution 52: 200-208. doi / pdf
Rundle, H.D. and S. Vamosi. 1996. Selection may be strongest when resources are scarce: a comment on Wilson. Evolutionary Ecology 10: 559-563. doi / pdf
Rundle, H.D. and D.A. Jackson. 1996. Spatial and temporal variation in littoral-zone fish communities: a new statistical approach. Canadian Journal of Fisheries and Aquatic Science 53: 2167-2176. doi / pdf
Gagnon, R., H. Rundle, L. Johnston and V.K.M. Han. 1995. Alterations in fetal and placental deoxyribonucleic acid synthesis rates after chronic fetal placental embolization. American Journal of Obstetrics and Gynecology 172: 1451-1458. doi / pdf
Bocking, A.D., S.E. White, S. Kent, L. Fraher, V.K.M. Han, H. Rundle and S.B. Hooper. 1995. Effect of prolonged catecholamine infusion on heart rate, blood pressure, breathing and growth in fetal sheep. Canadian Journal of Physiology and Pharmacology 73: 1750-1758. doi / pdf